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Predicting Partisan Responsiveness: A Probabilistic Text Mining Time-Series Approach

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  • Bustikova, Lenka
  • Siroky, David S.
  • Alashri, Saud
  • Alzahrani, Sultan

Abstract

When do parties respond to their political rivals and when do they ignore them? This article presents a new computational framework to detect, analyze and predict partisan responsiveness by showing when parties on opposite poles of the political spectrum react to each other’s agendas and thereby contribute to polarization. Once spikes in responsiveness are detected and categorized using latent Dirichlet allocation, we utilize the terms that comprise the topics, together with a gradient descent solver, to assess the classifier’s predictive accuracy. Using 10,597 documents from the official websites of radical right and ethnic political parties in Slovakia (2004–2014), the analysis predicts which political issues will elicit partisan reactions, and which will be ignored, with an accuracy of 83% (F-measure) and outperforms both Random Forest and Naive Bayes classifiers. Subject matter experts validate the approach and interpret the results.

Suggested Citation

  • Bustikova, Lenka & Siroky, David S. & Alashri, Saud & Alzahrani, Sultan, 2020. "Predicting Partisan Responsiveness: A Probabilistic Text Mining Time-Series Approach," Political Analysis, Cambridge University Press, vol. 28(1), pages 47-64, January.
  • Handle: RePEc:cup:polals:v:28:y:2020:i:1:p:47-64_3
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    Cited by:

    1. Hyundong Nam & Taewoo Nam, 2021. "Exploring Strategic Directions of Pandemic Crisis Management: A Text Analysis of World Economic Forum COVID-19 Reports," Sustainability, MDPI, vol. 13(8), pages 1-19, April.

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